Do you find that you are annoying other divers
because you run out of no-deco-stop time long
before they do? In groups of divers, those who
don't use nitrox often cut short the bottom time of
divers who do. If the divemaster running a group
makes everyone rise when the first person runs low
on no-deco-stop time, it's inevitable that air divers
will be the first. Those diving nitrox will then end
their dives when they could have stayed longer. It
ain't fair.
Thirty years ago, ex-NOAA scientist Dick
Rutkowski suggested that divers visiting deep
wrecks off the coast of Florida could reduce the
hazard of decompression illness (DCS) by increasing
the proportion of oxygen (thereby reducing the nitrogen levels) in the air they breathed, And
that's when nitrox for leisure divers was born.
It was inevitable that modern leisure divers
would see nitrox less like an additional safety
measure and more as a way to get better-value-formoney
with more time underwater. With dive trips
getting ever more exotic, and therefore, expensive,
time in the water had become more precious.
However, the popularity of nitrox has produced
conflict when divers who do not know each other
are required to dive as a group at a dive resort or
from a liveaboard. Nitrox divers are often disappointed
when an air diver runs out of no-deco-stop
time and needs to curtail the dive long before the
nitrox divers, thereby cutting short their dive.
Several Undercurrent readers have written us
about this, in a way surprising us that there are still
so many divers who are not yet nitrox certified. An
air diver may argue that he's always used air, so why
change, but he's ignoring three strong and simple
reason.
First, nitrox is safer, much safer, especially for an
aging diver.
Second, you can have far more time underwater
-- time for which you have traveled far and paid
dearly.
Third, your stubbornness in sticking to the past
won't be cutting short the dives of others.
Nitrox doesn't make the contents of your tank
last longer, but it can make you last longer!
NRC (Nitrox & Rebreather College) was a
German company that introduced a very much
simplified nitrox course at the turn of this century,
and bigger dive centers world-wide started to adopt
it en masse. It was threatening PADI's dominance
of diver training, so they bought NRC. There was
a time, after that, nitrox training was included
in PADI Open Water Diver training. Those days
appear to be long forgotten.
So, of course, today PADI charges for a dry
nitrox course, which can be undertaken at a PADI
training facility or taken online by anyone with a
PADI OWD or higher certification. After completing
the on-line section of the course, you contact
a PADI instructor or school for the practical experience
of analyzing the contents of a tank. That
should take you about 15 minutes at most.
The course cost to be certified as a nitrox diver
is an exorbitant $250, plus or minus. We don't
believe it merits being a separate course, and, in
fact, should be integrated into every basic course.
Everybody should be versed in it. But PADI wants
the additional income, and it's not going away.
Regardless, amortize the $250 over your next 25
dives. Then, consider the price of nitrox. If you
have to pay $10/tank, your extra 25 minutes underwater
at 60 feet runs $20, about half as much diving
time. And, you won't be pissing off our buddies who
have to cut their dives short because of you.
Go to www.padi.com/padi-courses/enriched-airdiver.
There are several other training agencies that
also run nitrox courses. It isn't rocket science!
- John Bantin